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Vulnerability of personality disorder during COVID-19 crises: a multicenter survey of mental and social distress among patients referred to treatment.

Authors :
Hartveit Kvarstein, Elfrida
Zahl, Kjell-Einar
Stänicke, Line Indrevoll
Pettersen, Mona Skjeklesæther
Baltzersen, Åse-Line
Johansen, Merete Selsbak
Eikenæs, Ingeborg Ulltveit-Moe
Hummelen, Benjamin
Wilberg, Theresa
Ajo Arnevik, Espen
Pedersen, Geir
Source :
Nordic Journal of Psychiatry; Feb 2022, Vol. 76 Issue 2, p138-149, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Relational and emotional problems, dysregulation, self-harming or substance abuse often characterize personality disorders (PD). In Norway, COVID-19 restrictions led to an abrupt shutdown of services from 12 March 2020 also including specialized PD treatments. The objective of this study was to investigate social and mental distress among patients with PDs during the first COVID-19 wave. A survey was distributed after the first COVID-19 wave (June–October 2020) among 1120 patients from 12 PD treatment units. The response rate was 12% (N = 133). The survey reflected impairment of occupational activity (53% <50% activity last 6 months), life quality (EQ-5D-VAS: 56, SD 19), and personality functioning (LPFS-BF ≥12: 81%, 35% avoidant PD, 44% borderline PD) and high levels of depression and anxiety (PHQ-9 ≥ 10: 84%, GAD-7 ≥ 10: 68%), 49% with health-related anxiety. Problem increase was reported for anxiety (28%), depression (24%), aggression (23%), substance use (14%), and 70% of parents had more child-care difficulties. Self-destructive behaviors (26%) did not increase. The majority (78%) reported increased or unchanged social isolation and loneliness. Occupational activity declined with negative effects on part-time jobs/rehabilitation. Therapist contact was mainly telephone-based (63% ≥ weekly contact). More severe personality problems, current depressive symptoms, and self-harming before 12 March were associated with more frequent consultations. The survey confirms severe, enhanced levels of mental distress among patients receiving telephone-based consultations as the main alternative to specialized PD treatment during the COVID-19 shutdown. The most vulnerable patients received more frequent consultations and self-destructive actions did not increase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08039488
Volume :
76
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nordic Journal of Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155030324
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/08039488.2021.1942980